gainer
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- Sep 20, 2002
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The fact that you gave the amount of Calgon in ml made me wonder, belatedly, if you were using the liquid Calgon. I finally looked up the manufacturer's MSDS and found that the liquid and powder are different. The liquid lists only sodium hydroxide (5-10%) and citric acid (8-10%) as ingredients which leads me to believe it is mostly a solution of the trisodium citrate. 8 ml of that would hardly change the pH of a liter of most developers we use. I still don't see how or how much it could restrain chemical fog. Dichroic fog is IIRC a matter of a mirror-like coating of silver by a process akin to physical development, but not selective. Maybe it could prevent that.psvensson said:Thanks, Tom! I guess it doesn't look like a stretch to imagine that the citrate chelates silver.
The Calgon I used is of recent make. It says that it contains no phosphorous.
Here's the formula I used:
2 tbsp Diamond kosher salt
1/2 tsp Arm & Hammer Washing Soda
8 ml Calgon
2 g ascorbic acid
5 ml phenidone 1% in rubbing alcohol
1l water
Develops Tri-X in about 10 mins at 71F. It gives fairly fine-grained results, but not as fine as one that uses sulfite instead of salt.
The amount of Calgon appears to be close to the minimum: if I halve it, I start get dichroic fog.